Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 274, Decatur, Adams County, 21 November 1922 — Page 5

| LOCAL NEWS S22^™22ZZZ2E^

■ r ami Mrs. H. P. Moses, of Ft. entertained with a house party and Mrs. J. C. Patterson, Mrs. Westveld, and Miss Annette *L g , over the week end. j K^, cry member is requested to at- ■ d the meeting of the Indies Aid of the Presbyterian Church , *arsday afternoon nt the home of , I, F. E. France as this is the last j Bting before the bazaar. [r. and Mrs. J. H. Williams have jrned from Huntington where they , nt several days with their grand F. Miller, of east of town, was . nn business today. lob Meibers has just returned from ianapaolls where he attended the , re Dame-Butler football game urday. /. F. Matchatt, of Pierceton, Inna, special agent for the Hartford ? Insurance Company, called on Kolter of the American Surety ■nnpany yesterday. ■ Genevieve Berling, Mae Berling, Re■na Murtaugh, Marie Murtaugh and fcther Miller motored to South Bend Sunday. I Mr. M. Kirsch was in Ft. Wayne Sunday afternoon attending to bustKiess in regard to the Reformed OrKhans Home. ■ Judge J. T. Merryman returned from (Ihicago Sunday evening. Mrs. Merrylan who is visiting with her daughter, rill remain for Thanksgiving at which ,ime Mr. Merryman will join her. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Haberman of Jary, Indiana announce the arrival if a son, who has been named Vernon 1. the mother was formerly Miss Ruth Mirand of this city. The Civic Section of the Woman’s :lub have a program of activities pre>ared forth/ wipter months in the inerest of the children and in order o raise funds a two cent supper will be given by the women at the K. of P. home on Saturday evening, November 25th. Those who are not members of the club and wish to donate should call Mrs. Ed Ahr. A large crowd attended the K. of C. meeting last evening and heard Father Seimctz give a talk on his experiences while abroad. Dore B. Erwin visited his daughter Miss Doris, in Chicago last Sunday. Miss Doris is supervisor of the girls' wojk in the Jefferjpm JParfe. Prpsby. terian church. She likes her work very much. Mr. Fred Kolter of the American Surety Bank went to Geneva today to attend to business. Dave Neuenschwander of Berne was in town today on business. J. F. Arnold will leave tonight for Bryan, Ohio, and other points in Ohio on a business trip. D. B. Ford and Chas E. Schwartz, of Portland, Indiana, were here today to attend the Directors’ meeting at the Peoples Loan & Trust Co. S. E. Brown went to Marion today where he will join the Farmer rty which is again looking over Indiana sites for the proposed Yeomen home. They will be in Winchester tomorrow and here on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Heller 'sited in Fort Wayne this afternoon. The contract for stationary supplies for the county jail will be Iqt at ten o’clock Tuesday morning,, December 12th. The legal notice will be printed

10 r I STEPHEN DECATUR. .. Money Really Yours The greatest part of your money you have the pleasure of keeping for a short time only. But what you save is really e yours. How much arc you putting aside for vourself each week. The important thing is not how much money you make hut how much of it remains perm- . anently in your possession. Keep a part of the money you get. A Savings Account here . provides the way. I ! Bqnk _, Capital and Surplus Decatur, W' 1 ’ r-

Friday. William Beineke has returned from bort Wayne where he attended a conference of Reformed Church delegates interested in the orphan’s school C. D. Kunkel and family, A. R. Bell and others from this county attended the funeral service for Calvin Kunkel of Tocsin, held at Bluffton this morning. Garages are doing quite a business these days filling the radiators of cars with alcohol to prevent freeing No its no good to drink. A large delegation from here will go to I ort Wayne Friday to witness the football game when the locals meet the fast Catholic High schoo’ team. Mrs. P. S. Howard and granddaughter, Janet Ferguson, of Van Buren, are returning home after a several days visit with Mr. and Mrs. John Baumgartner. Mr. 8. E. Brown left today at noon for Marion where he will meet Mr. Farmer, Mr. McKee and Mr. Erwin, state manager for the Yeomen, and will return here Thursday. Mrs. D. F. Ford of Portland is Imre for a several days visit with her daughter, Mrs. J. F. Arnold. Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Newport of Monroe were in this city yesterday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Staley have returned from their wedding trip. Mr. Oscar Lankeneau went to Fort Wayne this afternoon. Mrs. Pierceton, of west of the city, was in town shopping, today. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Dolch were in town today on business. Mr. Sam Butler has gone to Indianapolis to attend the I. O. O. F. grand lodge and will stop at Knightstow n on his return home to see his daughter. Mrs. J. R. Peterson. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Eichoff and daughter, Lucinda, were in town to day. Mr. John Grieb, of Wren, Ohio, was in town today on business. Mrs. William Weigman. of east o Hoagland, spent the day in Decatur shopping. Attorney Frank Cotterell, of Berne Indiana, was in this city today attending to legal business. Eleventh Anniversary Sale Begins Tomorrow The eleventh anniversary sale of E. F. Gass & Son, local merchants will open at 8:30 o’clock tomorrow morning. The entire new stock o ladies’ dresses, coats and other wearing apparel will be placed on sale at great reductions in prices. Many la dies' suits are reduced fifty per cent of the original price. The sale will close on Saturday, December 9. No doubt the ladies of Decatur and Adams county will take advantage of this great sale. o Cline Released Yesterday Evening On Bond Lewis Cline, the young man arrested here yesterday on a charge of fraudulent marriage, was released from the county jail late yesterday, after furnishing bond in the sum of ?600 for his appearance in court on December 1.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1922.

Makes Loose Teeth Firm and Immovable Heals Sore, Tender Gums and Makes Teeth so Firm Eating is a Pleasure People who have spongy, soft, sore, bleeding or receding gums or loose teeth—-symptoms of that dread disease —Pyorrhea—are foolisli it they permit these ailments to trouble them unnecessarily. They can do as hundreds of others have done, start at once to use the MOAVA DENTAL TREATMENT, the discovery of a well known Rochester, N. Y., dentist. As a result of using this treatment which in the form of dental paste is simple and cleanly to use, your teeth wiil begin to tighten, the gums will stop bleeding, receding or discharging pus and the entire mouth and throat feel cleaner and taste sweeter. You have undoubtedly wanted to know if a treatment existed that could cure Pyorrhea or Rigg’s Disease and put an end to all mouth and gum disorders. MOAVA DENTAL CREAM is lust such a treatment and you can try it on the money back if dissatisfied »lan. All good druggists can supply you. o 2 cent supper, Saturday, Nov. 25th, K. of P. home, 5 to 7, benefit Civic Section of Woman’s club. 274-4tx First degree, initiation work this evening, Tuesday, Nov. 21st. Be there. ;—• Mr. Farmer To Arrive In City Late Tomorrow (Continued from page one) ourt them to the Industrial rooms vhere they will be welcomed by the itizens of Decatur. At noon they will be entertained for lunch at the Hotel Murray and in the evening the visitors vill be guests at the Rotary club, at heir regular meeting for which occasion a box social was arranged. Durng the day the men will ba shown >ver the sites flgain and given such nformation as they may desire by the ■ommittee on sites, Henrv B. Heller, xcting chairman. It is po°. :ble that .nether meeting or two m?y l e added o the days program depending on what the visitors themselves desire, t being the desire to permit them to iso the day as they wish. Shadow social and 2-cent swpper benefit Buelah Chapel, j at Peterson school Friday evening, Nov. 21. 274t2 o MENU FOR ANNUAL DINNER Following is the menu for the anmal Thanksgiving dinner at the Evanjelical church, Thursday. November 13: Noodle soup, roast chicken, nashed potatoes, gravy, glazed sweet potatoes, escalloped corn, cream slaw’, ranberry sauce, pickles, jelly, bread and butter, pie and coffee. The menu or the two-cent supper on the eveling of Thursday, November 23 ’at the ame church is: noodle soup, creamd chicken, meat loaf, escalloped potaoes, sweet potatoes, baked beans, poato salad, pie, cake, fruit salad, cofee, and ice-cream. 2t. o Harding Advocates Ship Subsidy Bill (Continued from Page One) their wishes into action will longer sustain a program of obstruction and attending losses to the treasury.” Calls It “Government Aid” Mr. Harding said the bill was not a subsidy, but “government aid,” in the same sense as the government provides aid in building inland water ways and improving roads to aid in the growth of commerce. The president emphatically declared that since the government aids industry by tariffs and reclamation, water power delevopment, agriculture and marketing by other legislation, it should not hesitate to aid shipping. “But call it ‘subsidy’ he said., “since there are those who prefer to appeal to mistaken prejudice rather than make frank and logical argument.” The president reviewed the situation briefly and graphically, pointing what he called “a gloomy picture of losses.” He told how the merchant marine was built at. a cost of $3,000,000,000. The president urged congress to forget local political questions in dealing with the problem. He said some members of congress had expressed the fear that a vote for the subsidy would hurt them with their constituents. To them, ho appealed for loftier statesmanship, to support and commend a policy designed to effect the larger good to the nation” rather than to "record the too hasty impressions of a. constitutency,” 0 Boston —“Strangler” Ed Lewis will meet George Ketsonaros in a wrestling bout here Wednesday night. George Calsa, Italia champion, will meet Cliff Brinkley. Western star, oil i the same evening.

MAKES DEFENSE OF HER SCHOOL Local Student In Indiana University Defends The Present Water System In an article published in the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel last week, Anlte Swearinger, of this city, strongly upholds the water situation at Indiana University where she is a student. Miss Swearenger answers another writer, who through the columns of the Fort Wayne newspaper, made many contemptible statements concerning the water situation in Bloomington. The article is interesting and well-written. It is as follows: I, a member of Indiana university, wish to combat the contemptible statements being made concerning the water situation here. First, let me say, we are experiencing an inconvenience, but it is only the inconvenience which our fathers and grandfathers accepted without a murmrer. The university has water and plenty of it, but we have to use it on the campus. Being on the campus most of the time, this is not a great bother to us. Other conveniences are being added to the houses that we now have water in the houses. Water delivered to the houses free of charge and many cisterns in the town supply us with water. As to the man who visited Bloomington and says, “We haven't had a bath for months except by corn cob rubs,” I wish to say that corn cobs are more scarce than water. This is not a corn-growing district. Every student who has the inclination can have a bath at his convenience. All he has to do is to go to one of the gymnasiums or to a university dormitory. However, if there is anyone who is too lazy to exert himself that much ic might have to go without a bath. The water at no time has been turned off in the university' pipes,, 1 wish this man to know. The university dam spoken of by , this man as the "water hole up somewhere in the hills” has been the salvation not only to us students, but f Bloomington as well. It is much more than a hole. It is a well conjstructod reservoir. This man tried to wax poetic by ! saying that in this awful situation Were hundreds of the youth of Indiana triving for an education. Isn't that pathetic? One would think we were m the fields of Flanders. We have had the nerve to stand by the university, which is doing all in its power to relieve our inconvenience, and here comes a man, all tears, to plead our cause! We, as a student body, do not ask ■tliyone to come down here and misinterpret our situation as he has done! As to the, typhoid epidemic, we have none. There has been one case in the university this fall. People here are not paying exhorbitant prices for water. Those few who do buy spring water to drink are not paying much more than the freight price. The one thing commendable in this article was the union of Indiana and Purdue. But is this possible and is it practical? The two universities aro firmly established with an enormous amount of money invested. It would take time and a great sum of money to unite the institutions. Tile method this man seems to be using is not to help, but to wipe out Indiana. / Why destroy the work and efforts of many men to found a state institution? The whole spirit of Indiana rises against this. You cannot down our institution. We have come to a crisis, but we will pull through. We are your state institution and still you knock us. ROB RHEUMATISM PAIN FRO MSORE, ACHING JOINTS I What, is rheumatism? Pain only. St. Jacobs Oil will stop any pain so quit drugging. Not one caso in fifty requires internal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrating St. Jacobs Oil directly upon the tender spot and relief comes instantly'. St. Jacobs Oil is a harmless rheumatism -and sciatica liniment, which never disappoints and can not burn the skin. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get a small trial bottle from your druggist, and in just a moment you’ll be free from rheumatic and sciatica pain, soreness sticness and swelling. Don’t suffer! Relief awaits you. Old, honest St. Jacobs Oil has cured millions of rheumatism sufferers in the last half century, and is just as good I for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, backlache, sprains and swellings.

Why not help—not knock? (Signed) ANITE SWEARINGER. Decatur, Indiana SAGETEADANDY TO DARKEN HAIR It’s Grandmother’s Recipe to Bring Back Color and Lustre to Hhir. You can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you’ll get a bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound” at any drug store. Millions om bottles of this I old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the addition of other Ingredients, are sold annually, says a well-known druggist here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or becoming faded have a surprise awaiting them, because after one or two | applications the gray hair vanishes and your locks become luxuriently dark and beautiful. This is the age of youth. Grayhafred, unattractive folks aren't wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound tonight and you’ll be delighted with [ your dark, hadsome haid and your I youthful appearance within a few | days. Man Says His College Diploma Is Worth $50,000 Indianapolis, Nov. 20 —At last the, mooted question of how much a coliege diploma is worth may be settled. Amos A. Turner, student of the In-| diana Veterinary college, says his di I ploma if he could get it, would be | , worth $50,000 to him and it will be L up to the Judge of Superior, court to i | fix a value. Also, if Amos is successful inl forcing the college to grant him a, diploma, which he charges in his suit \ they refuse to give for leaving classes early a precedent may be established that will swamp the courts with busi-1 ness. The plaintiff alleges that he has fin'shed three of the four years re-: quired to graduate, and that Dr. Win. 11. Craig, in charge of various classes refused to let him in school when it | reopened September 28. this year. I The grounds for the refusal were that Amos left class fifteen minutes early 1 each noon to go to work in a down-' town restaurant where he earned his board. Turner stated that the covet-i ed diploma would be worth $5,000 a year for twenty years. a™ and sore? IMENTHOLATUM f quickly heals them.

f — ” — * » / i I The Same Goods for Less Money or Better Goods for the Same Money Z j .jfegi That’s the policy of (his store, and our Aw/. reason for featuring clothes that give satisZmlmWmf / -iJ# faction for the money paid for them. * ur s l ,ow * n M suits? ami overcoats for ' '!■&&\\ gfr, hoys, represent the newest styles in plain or W ! fancy mixtures. ./ pjlfcJW Buy Him is Steel Fibre Nik Clothes t * and you'll overcome jour clothes worries ‘ ' for the boy. They cost no more than other clothes, but wear much longer. Suits with ONE Pant.. $7.50 to sls Suits with TWO Pant $9.00 to $16.50 Boys Overcoats from $6.50 on up HOLTHOUSE, SCHULTE & CO. “Good Clothes Sellers For Men & Boys” | L _— - — — — - ... . Z . b - - - - -- ■ - - ' — J

> — — —- — * THERE'S real honest to goodness flavor in flour Olff 1 PIT milled from whole wheat (not denatured to make it K look white.) Then too —whole wheat contains I»*VIA abundant life-sustaining vitamins, iron, phosphates, mineral salts and'gluten the choicest parts of the YULIK wheat. The finest flavored and most nutritious loaf of broad that can be made is buked by us from II DC Whole Wheat Flour ** It is baked fresh every day and wrapped in wax paper. MILLER’S BAKERY Ask for it at your Grocers. The Cort T-H-E-A-T-R-E Last Time Tonight “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” One of the greatest productions of all times with RUDOLPH VALENTINO—AGNES AYRES and a Host of Other Stars Never Has There Been a Picture Like It. Fox News 12 Big Reels 15c and 35c I THE CRISTA! I THE MECCA I M Home of Paramount Pictures » Today and Tomorrow * ■ LAST TIME TONIGHT. ■ , M ■ May MacAvoy Benefit Psi lota Xi IRENE CASTLE S ‘ in 1 * n II ■ “SLIM SHOULDERS" ■ HOMESPUN The story of a de- B VAMP" H hula nte who committed ■ Sec lhis dain(v liHle ■ gg a social error to help Kg M ■ her father. B star, shiiung her best. More Thrill—More B You will like it. E Drama—More Romance S ... E Than any other picture. E ' s 0 —Also— E Comedy. |E Al St. John E r„ in E sc ~ loc “Ship Ahov” E THURSDAY & FRIDAY B lOc—2sc E S TOMORROW & THURSDAY E Constance bmney E Rogers and Lila Lee E j n E So | « “ONE GLORIOUS DAY” B “MIDNIGHT”